Enforced Coordination

All players are on the same team, opposed only by Murphy's Law and the Random Number God, and must coordinate their actions to win. The game rules are designed to put uncooperative players at a disadvantage (up to a quick defeat for the entire team), and may explicitly prohibit hindering other players in any way. An important trait of such games is that all players only ever win or lose them together.

Examples

Tabletop Games

Flash Point: Fire Rescue: The players must coordinate their movements and actions across the burning house to get enough victims out of the fire before the house collapses.

Pandemic: The players must coordinate their movements across the board to prevent and contain the recursive spread of disease outbreaks. While the original Pandemic only contains Enforced Coordination gameplay, the expansions introduced variants that turn it into Fixed Teams.

Mice and Mystics is an atypical Dungeon Crawling board game that dispenses with the Game Master. Instead, all players must work with each other against the Game System (which simulates the GM's typical duties, such as moving enemies and randomly placing traps) and odds that are stacked against them.

Video Games

Left 4 Dead: Coordination with your teammates is a must because you're constantly being attacked by Special Infected who can disable you and kill you dead if you don't have somebody watching your back. Wander away from the group? You're dead. Ignore your teammate who just got pinned to the ground by a Special Infected? He's dead, and now you're dead because he wasn't around to save you when the same thing happened to you.

On-Paper Cooperation

As in the "Enforced Coordination" category, players win or lose together, but the game does not require coordination. While all players exist within a shared imaginary environment of the game, anyone can strike out on one's own, as if playing a single-player game, without instantly endangering everyone else. The game may still prevent players from hindering each other, however.

Examples

Tabletop Games

Arkham Horror: The players lose if the Ancient One awakens and win if they manage to prevent it in time.

Super Mario Bros. 3: Playing two-player is advantageous because upon losing all your lives, you only have to replay the levels in the world that you initially beat note In a single player game, you had to replay all the levels in that world if you lost all your lives — only being able to skip levels if you managed to clear a fortress along the way; the levels beat by the other player will stay cleared unless he gets a Game Over as well. Other than that, however, it's just a hot-seat mode in which players take turns tackling levels exactly as they would in single-player, and they can even steal each other's turns and cards by engaging in battle between levels.

Diablo. Multiplayer plunks the players into a shared dungeon, but there is no particular advantage to sticking together and combining efforts rather than splitting up and tackling the enemies separately, meeting up occasionally to trade loot.

Journey: The goal is to reach the mountaintop, and while you and the Companion (another, randomly connected player online) can help each other by recharging each other's scarves, nothing prevents you from wandering off on your own in opposite directions.

Emergent Competition

The players can only win or lose together, but some elements of the game (like explicitly keeping individual scores) encourage competition among them. Crucially, however, this competition is not endorsed by the rules and exists primarily in the players' heads.

Examples

Video Games

Dynasty Warriors: In the co-op, both players have the same goal but invariably compete with each other for higher kill counts.

Elsword: The game automatically marks players who don't contribute much in dungeons for a kick vote. In theory, this prevents AFKing players and nudges the rest to contribute in the dungeon play, but as a side effect, players try to out-contribute each other, creating endless discussions of "the best PVE character" and lots of character rebalance updates, and forcing players to get better gear. Essentially, it turns PVE play from cooperative to competitive.

Zig-Zagged in the Mass Effect 3 multiplayer: All players have the same goal of surviving eleven enemy waves, completing objectives, and killing as many enemies as possible, but the game keeps each player's scores separately. This added a competitive element to the gameplay, but it was negated by the mechanics of giving points for damage, not kills and of distributing XP and money rewards evenly among all players after the match. However, later patches introduced Challenges, some of which specifically require kills to complete, which, in turn, added explicit competitive dynamics, such as kill-stealing, to the game.

The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures: Players interact simultaneously in a shared environment, moving from one room to the next, trying to reach the end of each level. But at the end of each level, a score is given and players are rated based on items collected, damage taken, and enemies defeated, and a "winner" is declared.

Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon: In the multiplayer mode "Scarescraper", players work together to reach the goal on each floor. At the end of each floor, a bonus game occurs in which players race to collect red coins before a short timer runs out. If all four red coins are collected, a bonus item is given to one player. Each player has a chance to receive the item, but the chance is greater for a player who collected more red coins. So players typically compete to individually collect as many red coins as possible, while still allowing the team to collect all four.

New Super Mario Bros. Wii: There's ostensibly little reason not to cooperate, as the game gives out as many powerups as there are players and there's no real reward for Griefing. However, Video Game Cruelty Potential is turned Up to Eleven, as the slightest bump can send another player into a Bottomless Pit, and it's all-too-easy to accidentally take an extra powerup that gives you nothing but meaningless points but screws another player out of an extra Hit Point. On the OTHER hand, as long as one player remains alive, they can revive dead teammates ad nauseam. Four-player matches tend to careen wildly from one end of the Sliding Scale to the other, from a free-for-all of players killing each other off in a never-ending cycle of revenge, to cheering for the sole remaining player to stay alive long enough to revive the rest, only to go right back to stabbing each other in the back as soon as possible.

Carmen Sandiego's ThinkQuick Challenge: In multiplayer mode, players work together to complete the mission, but they also compete amongst themselves to get the highest score and to be the one who captures the thief.

Treacherous Teammate

All players are on the same team... except the Traitor, who secretly works to subvert the team's efforts. Crucially, unmasking the traitor isn't an Instant-Win Condition—the players still have to beat Murphy's Law and the RNG to win (though the Traitor does technically "win" if they lose).

Examples

Tabletop Games

Shadows over Camelot: The Traitor is determined at the start of the game by drawing so-called "loyalty cards"—though it is possible that no player draws the traitor card in a given game. If exposed, the traitor cannot continue to play normally but can still play mean tricks on the others, turning the game into an explicit Asymmetric Multiplayer competition. For groups of three players, it is recommended that the players don't check their loyalty cards until several turns into the game to give the loyal ones a head start.

Dead of Winter puts players in the shoes of Zombie Apocalypse survivors who must cooperate to survive in various disaster scenarios. In addition to a group goal, each player has a secret agenda, assigned randomly by drawing cards—and while some of them can run contrary to the group goal, one available agenda is explicitly the Traitor who can only win by ensuring others' loss.

Game Shows

The Mole. A team of players tries to win contests in order to add money to the pot. However one of the players is The Mole, who is doing his/her best to cause the team to lose contests. Each week one of the players is sent home. Whoever is the last player remaining (other than the Mole) gets what's in the pot.

Webcomics

The Zombie Apocalypse game the main cast plays in Weregeek turns out to belong to this type: one of player characters is actually the infection vector who reveals herself when only two survivors are left—to murder the remaining uninfected one.

Team vs. Lone Wolf

A mix of the Traitor and Fixed Teams gameplay, where the opponent is known to the other players from the start, but often gets gameplay advantages to compensate (such as their location being hidden from the other players). Unlike the "Treacherous Teammate", defeating the Lone Wolf may well be the main goal of the Team and their Instant-Win Condition.

Examples

Tabletop Games

Scotland Yard: A group of detectives travel through London in pursuit of "Mr. X". Mr. X's location is hidden for most of the game, but he shows himself at certain points.

The "Bioterrorist" variant from the Pandemic supplement "On The Brink". One of the players is a bioterrorist who is trying to spread the disease that the others are trying to stop.

The Hidden (a Source mod): An invisible player with superpowers is pitted against a spec ops team sent to kill him.

Informed Minority vs. Uninformed Majority

This is similar to the Traitor gameplay, except multiple players are the "traitors" here: They know who they are (informed minority) but other players don't (uninformed majority). To facilitate communication between IM, such games may divide turns into phases: In phase I, everyone participates in the gameplay; in phase II, only the IM communicates, while the UM is locked out. The winning conditions are defined for IM and UM separately and when one group wins, the other loses.

Examples

The parlor game Mafia and its derivatives, The Werewolves of Miller's Hollow and Werewolf: All players are "citizens" (UM) but some are additionally mafiosi/werewolves (IM). During the night phases, the latter eliminate one citizen from the game; during the day, everyone votes to eliminate a suspected mafioso/werewolf. The IM wins if they comprise a half of the remaining players; the UM wins if the entire IM is eliminated.

Battlestar Galactica (the board game based on the eponymous series): One or more of the players are secretly Cylon agents and must hinder the human players in their tasks. During long space jumps, the loyalty cards are dealt again and the previously loyal human players may join the Cylons. Unmasked Cylon agents continue the game as explicit enemies.

Resistance (board game): Two out of five freedom fighters are actually government spies trying to subvert La Résistance's operations, and the loyal resistance members win by succeeding at more operations than the spies foil (and vice versa).

Secret Hitler introduces a twist: Players are liberals (UM) or fascists (IM). One player, however, is Hitler. While Hitler is on the fascist team he does not actually know who else is, making him the only uninformed player in the minority. The other fascists (who know everybody's roles) have to subtly communicate to Hitler that they are on his team.

Fixed Teams

The players are divided into two or more teams and must cooperate within them to prevail over the other team(s). The composition of the teams is determined and, crucially, known to everyone before the game starts, and the same winning conditions usually apply to all teams. Switching teams mid-game may be possible but is usually discouraged with heavy penalties.

Examples

Tabletop Games

Star Wars X-Wing: The players are allied either with the Republic or the Empire and must cooperate within those factions.

Avalon Hill's Third Reich. If multiple players control the Axis countries, Allied countries or both, then it is imperative that they cooperate with each other or it is certain that the opposing side will win. For example, even though the American and British players will be competing with the Soviet player for objective hexes at the end of the game, they must still fund the Lend Lease program to assist the Soviet player or the Axis players will defeat the Soviet Union and win the game.

Video Games

Team-based matches (deathmatch, capture the flag, etc.) are common in multiplayer video games, primarily shooters. It is often possible to change teams during gameplay but such practice is usually discouraged by the rules.

Dynamic Alliances

The players are allowed, expected, or even encouraged to form alliances with each other in the course of the game, but only one player (rarely, one alliance) can win it in the end, while everyone else loses. Kingmaker Scenarios are very likely in this kind of games.

Risk: The basic rules neither prohibit, nor encourage player alliances, which means that they are formed and broken just as easily in gameplay, since only one player can win (by eliminating every other player from the map).

Diplomacy: The players are encouraged by the very nature of the game to form alliances among each other but these are not enforced in any way by the rules, and only the first player to control over half the board wins.

Munchkin: Even though two players are allowed to team up to beat a monster together, both ultimately only look after their own interests. And only the first player to reach Character Level 10 wins.

In DEFCON, players may form and break alliances at-will, but there is only one winner per game. In one mode, the whole world starts the game in a single alliance, yet this peace is all but guaranteed to fall apart in minutes because alliances have nearly as many downsides as war.

Web Original

In STO Forum: Versus thread (rp) player characters who encounter one another are free to work together or try to kill one another, but according to the scenario only two characters can actually get off the planet. How this shakes out varies: Kang and Kanril Eleya are a solid team, minus some occasional bickering, while Torpal and Romulan Spy Agent 007 did an Enemy Mine and briefly engaged in Teeth-Clenched Teamworkbefore each tried to use the other as bait for some Jem'Hadar and Torpal ended up getting vaporized.

In the Community episode "Digital Estate Planning", the study group plays a super-immersive video game with VR helmets, 8-bit graphics, andWide Open Sandbox complexity. The game was designed as a free-for-all with the first person to reach the end winning the Hawthorne fortune. However, the study group almost immediately decides that Pierce is the rightful heir and they cooperate so that he can win it. Then they find out that there is another player who is competing against them so it ends up being a team competition.

Free-for-All Competition

Every player competes against everyone else, with no motivation to form alliances or rules to enforce them.

Examples

Tabletop Games

In Euro Games (a.k.a. German-style board games), players generally have little incentive and potential to form alliances, and while communication and trade are encouraged, everyone ultimately only looks out for oneself.

Lords of Waterdeep: The player with the most points at the end of the game wins.

Small World: Everyone fights everyone for the place under the Sun and the player with the most points after N turns wins.

Video Games

At the end of a LittleBigPlanet level, the scoreboard counts up who got the most points, so people may be inclined to go for the points instead. Alternatively, some levels may tip the scales in other directions instead, but mostly in the community.

Free-for-all deathmatches are the oldest type of multiplayer shooter gameplay.

Counter-Strike: In the popular mod "Gun Game", even though players belong to one of two teams (like in the vanilla game), and most servers are set up so that players can't hurt teammates, or else so that players are punished for hurting teammates, there is little incentive to work cooperatively, since only one player wins the Gun Game, and does so by getting as many kills as possible, which encourages kill stealing.

In role-playing and narrative games, the players may technically play against the Game Master or even against each other, but there is no real "win condition": Everyone's goal is to have fun and they only "lose" if the game turns out to be boring.

Fiasco: The goal of the game is to create a cohesive narrative of people's lives going down the drain, and players are encouraged to cooperate in making each other's characters as miserable as possible.

Community

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